Chamar, Armande: Hugh Person's wife, has a lot of affairs, one of the possible narrators, TT

Clementses, Laurence, Joan and Isabel: Laurence as Professor of Philosophy at Waindell, Joan as his affectionate wife, have Pnin as a lodger in their house, their daughter Isabel who is married and whose room Pnin occupies, Pnin

Hagen, Herman: head of German Dept. at Waindell College, "staunch protector" of Pnin, Pnin

The Inventor: a somewhat sinister figure in the novel staying at the "Montevideo", designs for Dreyer a series of "auto-mannequins" - dummies who move in a life-like way so as to exhibit clothes, counterpart of Enricht (see above), KQK

Lupolova, Praskovia (c.1784-1809): A counterexample to how Mademoiselle arrived in winter (zima), when coming to Vyra in 1905. A Russian folk hero who won a reprieve for her father's exile through an imperial decree, an ukase (указ). Her story is referenced by the mention of Xavier de Maistre's novella, La Jeune Sibérienne / The Young Siberian Girl, DB (Ch. 5)

Luzhin's Aunt: second cousin to Luzhin's mother, "sweet copper-haired", Luzhin bunks school to play chess at her house, affair with his father, Defense

Luzhin's mother: elder Luzhin's wife, her father as a virtuoso violinist, dies by end of Chap 4 alone, Defense

Miss Phalen: [Also See Phalen, Euphemia] Watchdog of Lolita for Mrs. Haze. Miss Phalen had misfallen into the wordplay of Phalène, when she broke her hip, Lolita [See articles: Miss Phalen in Lolita and Meet Miss Phalen in Lolita.]

Miss Pratt: Headmistress of Beardsley School for Girls (Lolita's finishing school); Nabokov might have been playing on a formula such as ‘prattling prate of a prat,’ Lolita

Mrs. Luzhin: Luzhin's wife, daughter from a wealthy family, currently living in Germany, sets everything up, kind and sensitive but unable to reach out to Luzhin, Defense

Mrs. Luzhin's mother: Luzhin's mother-in-law; disapproves of her son-in-law and his profession; cold war with her daughter, Defense